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How to Force Bulbs

by Fern on September 10, 2008

in Winter Gardening

Forcing bulbs — or tricking them into thinking they’ve have a nice cold winter — is a great way to indoor blooms during the dead of winter. It’s also necessary if you live in a mild climate and want beautiful tulips, daffodils or hyacinth during winter and early spring.

Photo by talekinker

As a number of bloggers have noted, you will be seeing spring bulbs in your local garden center soon, if they’re not there already. Many bulbs need a good long chill before sending up leaves and blooms. In cold climates, this can easily be achieved by planting the bulbs in the fall, before the first frost, and leaving them to their own devices over the winter. But if you live in a more mild climate, like me, or you want to enjoy their blooms during winter, you have to provide an artificial winter, which is called “forcing.”

Forcing bulbs is pretty simple. It can be done in your refrigerator, or a garage or basement. Pretty much any place that provides consistent temperatures below 50 degrees (F) but above freezing temperatures.

  1. Pot the bulbs in clean, sterile pots. You can place the bulbs very close together, so put as many bulbs as you can in a single layer. For example, 6 tulip bulbs will fit in a 6 inch pot. Normally you want to leave the pointy “nose” of the bulbs exposed. So fill the pot with dirt but not all the way to the top.
  2. Water the bulbs immediately upon planting, and thereafter the soil should never be allowed to become dry.
  3. Put them in a loosely tied plastic bag in your fridge or other cold spot. Check them every week or so to make sure the soil is moist. Also check to see if roots are coming out of the drainage hole in the bottom of the pot. When you see roots sticking out and 2-3 inches of green shoots, it’s time to bring the bulbs out of the fridge. Most bulbs require 5-6 weeks, but some, such as tulips, can require as much as 16 weeks.
  4. Place the pots in a cool location, such as a shaded corner of the balcony. Somewhere that is about 50 degrees (F). Rotate the pots once a day so that the stems and leaves grow evenly and upright.
  5. When the flower buds are plump and ready to open, put the pots in a sunny location, such as a bright windowsill. Returning flowering plants to a cool location overnight will extend the life of their blooms.
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{ 4 comments… read them below or add one }

jen September 10, 2008 at 4:42 pm

Fern, do you not get any frost at all? How cold does the temperature drop down to?
Jen

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Fern September 10, 2008 at 5:20 pm

Jen — I live less than a mile from the beach, so it rarely gets below 50 during the day and 40 at night. Technically, our first frost is in December, and our last frost is in February, but I’ve never had any of my plants die because they froze or it got too cold.

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Phillippa September 11, 2008 at 5:47 am

Fern – we live right by the coast too, and never get frost. Our bulbs seem to appreciate some quality time in the refrigerator over winter. :-)

Phillippa

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Fern September 11, 2008 at 8:25 pm

Phillippa — Yeah, I think the ocean keeps coastal temps from getting to low. Sometimes I think it’s boring to live in a place that is 70 degrees most of the year…Then I get over it when the news starts talking about the storm of the century that just dropped 10 feet of snow in one hour all over the North East. ;-)

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